Despite crisis, remittances to India at record high

Despite crisis, remittances to India at record high

Notwithstanding the recent global financial crisis, remittance flows to developing countries including India is expected to reach $325 billion by the end of this year and is likely to exceed to $370 billion in two years' time, the World Bank says.

According to the World Bank's latest Migration and Remittances Factbook 2011, remittance flows to developing countries is expected to reach $325 billion by the end of this year, up from $307 billion in 2009.

Worldwide, remittance flows are expected to reach $440 billion by the end of this year.

"Remittances in 2008 and 2009 became even more of a lifeline to poor countries, given the massive decline in private capital flows sparked by the crisis," Dilip Ratha, manager of the migration and remittance unit at the World Bank said.

Despite crisis, remittances to India at record high

Remittance flows to developing countries is expected to cross $370 billion, but this outlook is subject to the risks of a fragile global economic recovery, volatile currency and commodity price movements, and rising anti-immigration sentiment in many destination countries, the report added.

Ratha further added, "high unemployment is prompting many migrant-receiving countries to tighten immigration quotas, which would probably slow the growth of remittance flows. Also uncertain currency movements can have unpredictable effects on remittance flows."

In addition to crisis-related risks, regulations to combat financial crime have become a roadblock to the adoption of new mobile money transfer technologies for cross-border remittances.

Despite crisis, remittances to India at record high

"The report further added that MexicoUnited States is expected to be the largest migration corridor in the world this year, followed by RussiaUkraine, UkraineRussia, and BangladeshIndia.

Some developing regions in Europe and Central Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, West Asia and North Africa, and Sub-Saharan Africa witnessed larger-than-expected falls in remittances in 2009, while flows to South Asia in 2009 grew more than expected.